In the absence of a Codex or Quipu how do we know the use of ceremonial sound instruments—objects once abundant across the Americas/Abya Yala?

To create these images, I draw on a variety of sources: archaeological records, field studies, and the early writings of Franciscans and Jesuits documenting their first encounters with Indigenous peoples. I also gather knowledge from my family, the land of my ancestral homelands, and a lifetime of listening to elders around the fire, observing how certain ceremonies sustain the vital energy of life.

These photographs seek to build a diasporic archive, while questioning how we produce images for the present that are rooted in a future-past. In doing so, they subvert the colonial use of photography, offering a counter-narrative that challenges its historical role in shaping perception.

There is a form of conjuring that happens when all these sources collide, perhaps something is remembered.

To Conjure: New Archives in Recent Photography, installed at the International Center of Photography, New York, NY, © Jennah Moon

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Sound Studies-Estudio de Sonidos

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Spirit Vessel